Difference between revisions of "Category:Paladins"
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− | *=''Witcher'': Inverted/Played With | + | *Paladin=''Witcher'': Inverted/Played With. Where the witcher is grimdark, the paladin is shiny-happy(?) :P |
*The choosing can be very "Joan of Arc" | *The choosing can be very "Joan of Arc" | ||
*Might throw a little ''Buffy the Vampire Slayer'' and/or ''Grimm'' in there if I can fit it | *Might throw a little ''Buffy the Vampire Slayer'' and/or ''Grimm'' in there if I can fit it | ||
[[Category:Legends_of_Generica]][[Category:Organizations of Clichéa]][[Category:Societies of Clichéa]][[Category:Imperial Church of the Pantheon]] | [[Category:Legends_of_Generica]][[Category:Organizations of Clichéa]][[Category:Societies of Clichéa]][[Category:Imperial Church of the Pantheon]] |
Revision as of 13:21, 9 December 2020
A paladin is someone who is chosen by one of the gods of the Pantheon as a champion, and blessed by his "patron" with power, in preparation for becoming an itinerant monster-slayer and troubleshooter.
Contents
Tropes
History
Creation
Nine-thousand years ago, as humans settled in Clichéa, they had to deal with a vast array of monsters that inhabited the land and which humans were poorly equipped to deal with. To fix this, each of the gods chose (in their own way) a candidate, reflective of their own temperament, and made him into a magic-wielding warrior tasked to deal with the monsters on their behalf. In these early years, each of the gods would choose only one such champion, replacing him some time after his death as the need might arise.
The First Age of Paladins
As the Old Empire rose up, and human territory continued to expand across the continent, the gods began to choose more than one champion to cover ever-widening borders, and the paladins grew in number. As greater foes sometimes required cooperation, they eventually banded together into an informal "order." However, over centuries, a combination of the gradual taming of the wild lands, and the inevitable conflict between the champions on behalf of their gods' rivalries, eventually led to the Order's end when their numbers dwindled and they stopped gathering.
Second Era of Paladins
After the Order ended and the Imperial Church of the Pantheon rose in prominence, the Second Era of Paladins began, which paladins themselves refer to as the Golden Age of Witchers. The collapse of the Old Empire into new disparate kingdoms gave rise to new "monsters" of war, the Church stepped in and begged the gods to bring back the paladins. Partnered with the Church, their work became efficiently organized. Many were knighted by their host kingdom, and sometimes (strategically) landed by their rulers. Past tensions between the paladins calmed down and when paladins of opposed gods crossed paths, no blood was shed as each knew they had their own territory, making them treat other chapters more like estranged brothers than bitter enemies like before.
End of the Golden Age
In the century leading up to the rise of Evil™, the paladins had been too successful. Monsters grew increasingly rare and, due to decadence and corruption within the Church, fallen paladins, and the distrust of the rulers, the gods lost interest in the whole idea, and the number of paladins had diminished greatly. Many of the remaining paladins died in the war against the Nefarian conquest a hundred years ago, and only a few have been chosen since.
Overview
In general, a paladin is a formidable and often overwhelming opponent to more mundane races thanks to their superhuman physical prowess, and magic. However, they are but men, and vulnerable as any other.
- A paladin will bear the mark of his Patron (the form of which depends on the god in question). He will also wear the symbol of his Patron as a heraldic device.
- They adhere to a strict code of behavior similar to a monastic order. A paladin can become "fallen" by failing to keep to this code, and be abandoned by his Patron.
- A paladin can be given to great passion, especially as those passions reflect the nature of his Patron.
- Often, but not always spellcasters, in addition to innate magical abilities.
- Paladins are most commonly human, though some have been chosen out of other races on occasion.
- The Imperial Church claims authority over paladins, and distrust (and sometimes shun) paladins that defy them.
Rumour Has It…
- It is said that the Church—and in specific, the Crusader Order—has been attempting to "create" their own paladins
- Many believe that a paladin cannot be influenced by the impure
Notes
- Paladin=Witcher: Inverted/Played With. Where the witcher is grimdark, the paladin is shiny-happy(?) :P
- The choosing can be very "Joan of Arc"
- Might throw a little Buffy the Vampire Slayer and/or Grimm in there if I can fit it